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Move over BlueRay & AOD... HVD~ 1 tetrabyte storage!!

jarrod

Banned
Holy crap!!

The world's first movie recording on a preformatted holographic disc.

YOKOHAMA, Japan, August 23, 2004

Optware Corp., the developer of Collinear Holographic* Data Storage System, announced today that it had achieved successfully world's first recording and play back of digital movies on a holographic recording disc with a reflective layer using Optware's revolutionary Collinear Holography. This is a major milestone for commercializing holographic data storage system.
The recorded movies were played back in a series of meetings from July eight through 12 with Optware's six existing investors as well as eight enterprises both domestic and overseas including leading manufacturers of electronic and electric products for consumer, business and industrial use. Company names are not disclosed.

Technical details will be presented at "COST Action P8 (Cooperation in the field of Scientific and Technical Research, http://cost.cordis.lu )", which will be held in Paris on September 16 and 17.

Recording holographic page data** on a rotating transparent disc has been reported before. Such discs, however, are foreign to the conventional optical discs. Lacking the servo information, they do not seem to have a commercial viability.
On the contrary Optware has proposed Collinear Holographic recording on a hologram disc the structure of which follows conventional optical disc, i.e. preformatted disc with a reflective layer (disc with servo information).
This type of disc has been said to be inadequate because preformatted address pits generate diffusion noise during read / write, thus deteriorate the signal quality.
Optware has overcome this problem by applying a dichroic mirror layer between the recording and reflective layers. This dichroic mirror layer blocks the diffusion by the address pits, allowing ideal collinear holographic recording.

Optware's demonstration is an epoch-making event in a sense that it proved the successful integration of optical disc technology and holographic recording technology.


cross_section_e.gif

Fig.1 Optware's Holographic Versatile Disc™ (HVD™) disc structure.

system_e.gif

Fig.2 Read / Write system

1st_movie_disc.jpg

Fig.3 Holographic Versatile Disc™ (HVD™) on which digital movies were recorded (left). The disc diameter of 12 centimeters is equivalent to those of CD and DVD.

multiprexing.jpg

Fig.4 The surface of the Holographic Versatile Disc™ (HVD™). Multiplexed holographic data patterns are seen along the tracks.

Optware's holographic recording technology

Holographic recording technology records data on discs in the form of laser interference fringes, enabling existing discs the same size as today's DVDs to store as much as one terabyte of data (200 times the capacity of a single layer DVD), with a transfer speed of one gigabyte per second (40 times the speed of DVD). This approach is rapidly gaining attention as a high-capacity, high-speed data storage technology for the age of broadband.

Optware Corp. was established in 1999 as a development venture to find ways of incorporating holographic recording technology, seen as the heart of the high-capacity optical discs of the future, in commercially viable products. The Company's arsenal of valuable patents includes collinear holography, a technique that enables great simplification of optical systems.

* The collinear holography technique
Optware's exclusive development of the collinear holography technique is part of its effort to make holographic recording technology practical. A patented technology originally proposed by Optware founder and chief evangelist Hideyoshi Horimai, collinear holography combines a reference laser and signal laser on a single beam, creating a three-dimensional hologram composed of data fringes. This image is illuminated on the medium using a single objective. Using this breakthrough mechanism, Optware dramatically simplified and downsized the previously bulky and complicated systems required to generate holograms. Further enhancements were achieved with Optware's exclusive servo system. The introduction of this mechanism enabled reduced pickup size, elimination of vibration isolators, high-level compatibility with DVD and CD discs and low-cost operation, effectively obliterating the remaining obstacles to full commercialization.

** Page data
Two dimensional bit map image to be recorded and played back by hologram. Data to be written is first encoded to a series of page data, then recoded holographically
 
With 1 terabyte of storage, would you even need to compress the video? That's impressive. Sheesh...

1 tereabyte = 1024 Gigabytes, correct?
 

GIR

Banned
The Shadow said:
With 1 terabyte of storage, would you even need to compress the video? That's impressive. Sheesh...

1 tereabyte = 1024 Gigabytes, correct?
For something like HDTV res (or even DVD res), Yes it would probably still be a good idea to compress the video as the data transfer rate of the drive would not be able to supply that much RAW data quickly enough.

Besides that, who the hell wants 12cm 1TB discs when you can have 8cm 100TB discs: Breakthrough Nanotechnology Will Bring 100 Terabyte 3.5-inch Digital Data Storage Disks, personally I think it's BS though.
 

Panajev2001a

GAF's Pleasant Genius
DarienA said:
Damn already?

Hey, you cannot sit there and rest ;).

HVD would use a blu-laser (at least this is what Sony is researching now with the help of HVD's creators) so an HVD player would be backward-compatible with Blu-Ray without a monumental engineering effort :).
 

DrGAKMAN

Banned
DarienA said:
Damn already?

Ummm...yeah, this has been worked on for a while now. If this is the same 1999 tech. I remember the reseacrh was started at some U.S. University and funded heavily by Matsushita (Panasonic). The problems back then were that hologram quality was unstable and below that of digital laser signals due to outside interferances manipulating holograms too easily and I think they were trying to go for disks that weren't of conventional shape (which goes back to why AOD/HD-DVD got footing aginst BRD/BR in the beginning of their struggles) which means commersial use was far off. It seems they've fixed those problems and with that hard disc coating that TDK (I think) developed...it could be coming out sooner than we think with this surprize announcement?

The hurdles now for this new format are:
-how much more expensive is it to formulate holographic reading/writing???
-have they truly fixed the problems with holograms being easily manipulated by outside forces...maybe they can make the read-only disc's stable, but what about drives that offer writing/re-writing...how stable will those be?
-are content providers going to trust a format that would allow for hours upon hours of HD quality movies/music/games that could possibly be cracked as easily as DVD's were???...or are they going to section off half of each disc to encryption coding???
-BR & HD-DVD are further along
 
GIR said:
For something like HDTV res (or even DVD res), Yes it would probably still be a good idea to compress the video as the data transfer rate of the drive would not be able to supply that much RAW data quickly enough.

Bingo. The biggest problem even with the new HD DVD types is transfer rate.

In response to Shadow's question, though:

Handy universal table
8 bits: 1 byte
1 kilobyte: 1024 bytes
1 megabyte: 1024 kilobytes
1 gigabyte: 1024 megabytes
1 terabyte: 1024 gigabytes

Really exotic sizes:
1 petabyte: 1024 terabytes (10 of these is theorized to be enough to hold the entirety of a person's life experiences)
1 exabyte: 1024 petabytes
1 zettabyte: 1024 exabytes
1 yottabyte: 1024 zettabytes (2^83)
 

GIR

Banned
Holographic recording technology records data on discs in the form of laser interference fringes, enabling existing discs the same size as today's DVDs to store as much as one terabyte of data (200 times the capacity of a single layer DVD), with a transfer speed of one gigabyte per second (40 times the speed of DVD). This approach is rapidly gaining attention as a high-capacity, high-speed data storage technology for the age of broadband.
I stand corrected, 1GB per sec should do nicely :)
 

kaching

"GAF's biggest wanker"
I was going to say...I hope nobody was thinking of making terabyte-class storage with only DVD level transfer speeds... ;)
 

GSG Flash

Nobody ruins my family vacation but me...and maybe the boy!
Didn't Nintendo invest in the development of an optical media which held 1 TB of space?
 

nitewulf

Member
DarienA said:
Damn already?

heh, how do you think big corps stay in business? smaller companies come up w/ revolutionary inventions/ideas all the time, but often lack the R&D funding. thats where big companies come in.
blue ray was always just a stop gap, not a next gen solution.
 

aaaaa0

Member
Panajev2001a said:
Sony is investing in this company and is funding further R&D to make HVD the successor to Blu-Ray :).

So are other companies.

"Sony and some major Japanese electronics companies are studying holographic storage to replace HD-DVDs and Blu-ray Discs. Sony wants to develop next-next generation storage technologies and we can say that our collinear solution is getting very popular," Kageyama said.

Sony always seems to get the press though.
 

FightyF

Banned
It's somewhat ironic. I've heard that the main barrier to holographic technology used for visual entertainment is the problem of having enough memory and enough bandwidth for that memory. Could these holographic discs possibly bring us holographic visuals for home use? 1GB per sec...nice!
 

gofreak

GAF's Bob Woodward
Fight for Freeform said:
Could these holographic discs possibly bring us holographic visuals for home use?

There isn't a linear relationship between storage capacity and graphical quality. Sure, large amounts of storage would be required for photorealistic or "holographic" visuals, but the storage itself won't make it so. It depends more critically on so much more else.
 

Discreet

Banned
so this is going to be nintendos trump card right holograms for revolution :)

one can dream but it would be amazing if Nintendo did use this for revolution this would stomp blu ray and dvd quick

Nintendo now u r playing with power
 

Teddman

Member
Yes, the good news is that HVD's been confirmed for Revolution.

The bad news is that Revolution is not coming out until 2012 now.
 
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